Silicon Valley executives are Watch Scandal Sin in the City (2001)meeting for half a day tomorrow in San Francisco to discuss consumer privacy, and people are kind of freaking out about it.
It all started when Axios reported Monday that people representing some of the largest technology companies in the world planned to meet and "discuss how to tackle growing questions and concerns about consumer privacy online."
The Information Technology Industry Council, an industry trade group that represents the biggest tech companies in Washington, invited its 67 member-companies to this special meeting. Spokespeople from Adobe, Autodesk, Facebook, Salesforce, and Visa have confirmed to Mashable that they will be in attendance. Adobe also told Mashable that it's even sending its chief privacy officer Alisa Bergman.
But the meeting isn't as big of a deal as it sounds.
SEE ALSO: The US army will give startups who invent new weapons a cash prizeSure, privacy and cybersecurity are hot-button issues right now amid the multiple Facebook scandals, surveillance threats, and skyrocketing international tensions. But major internet privacy scandals have been happening for years.
For example, the dating site for people interested in having an affair Ashley Madison had all its usernames hacked and leaked in 2015; a successful phishing scheme listed 10,000 Hotmail username and passwords online in 2009; and AOL accidentally posted a file of 650,000 users' searches in 2006. And the list goes on.
For just as long as these scandals have been happening, so have keynote meetings (like this upcoming one) that convene bigwigs from large technology companies.
Industry giants such as Dell, Equinix, and Intel — all members of the Council — said they will be skipping the gathering tomorrow, and Rapid7's public policy director Harley Geiger who also isn't attending said it's simply another meeting on privacy and security. These sorts of things, he said, have been happening for decades.
"[The reactions] made it seem like this is a secret meeting or sensationalistic," Geiger said. "This is a convening about privacy principles and coming to a consensus about privacy polices as well as other types of policy areas. It's actually a pretty normal and routine thing for a trade association or any kind of coalition to be doing."
Within the council, many committees focus on different topics, including cybersecurity and privacy. Geiger, who previously served as a senior legislative counsel focusing on tech and internet issues on the Hill, is a member of both.
These committees were designed to let members specialize on topics to later push for policies, and Geiger predicts that tomorrow's meeting — although not formatted like their normal ones — will just be for companies to express their ideas of security and will get parsed by the security committee.
The Information Technology Industry Council normally congregates in Washington, D.C. at the trade organization's headquarters with people calling in, but it probably made more sense to have it in San Francisco tomorrow, Geiger postulated, because it is closer to where security heads of corporations are located.
It's not uncommon for the Council to meet in different places for different purposes, even internationally.
Although it's not a top secret meeting of high-profile tech heavyweights, as people on social media have framed it to be, it willstill be interesting to see what comes out of it with so many privacy and security issues on consumers' minds.
Most likely, Geiger said, we will see the EU's GDPR, California's privacy bill, and subsequent security and privacy incidents drive the conversation for at least a short while, but a lot of work will still have to happen after the hours-long meeting tomorrow.
"Coming to a consensus on privacy or security issues — just like many other topics — is very hard, and I think that this a major, major reason why we haven't seen more federal action on this topic, like in Congress," Geiger said.
"It's a difficult problem, but to some extent, coming up with a consensus position [among the many companies] that's what at trade association is supposed to do. And I don't know to what extent they'll be successful, but they are smart people and they're putting in some effort to try to get it done."
Topics Cybersecurity Privacy
Pete Souza takes a break from Instagram to call Trump out on TwitterFlorida Governor's voter registration hacked by 205 tweets that highlight actions you can take on Latina Equal Pay DayNotion is the underrated productivity app that may change your work lifeInstagram changes breast holding policy after #IWantToSeeNyome campaignNASA's new discovery of water on the moon could aid future missionsNASA collected asteroid dust, but it's leaking on its return journeyUber, Lyft futures on the line in Prop. 22 fightPornhub reveals that yes, of course, tons of people are looking for boobs. Duh.Get smarter during quarantine with a Coursera Plus subscription for $399Everything coming to Amazon Prime Video in November 2020Not even prison can keep John McAfee from shilling cryptoGet smarter during quarantine with a Coursera Plus subscription for $399What people in swing states are talking about on Instagram'Watch Dogs: Legion' review: Freeing London from technofascismHackers used altered invoices to steal $2.3 million, says Wisconsin Republican PartyCNN just fired it's biggest proDonald Trump on '60 Minutes': 'Wouldn’t be here' without social mediaInstagram changes breast holding policy after #IWantToSeeNyome campaignHow this initiative amplifies the voting power of people with past convictions Cop stops driverless car, driverless car seems to flee, confusion ensues 'Wordle' 296 today: Here's the answer, hints for April 11 WhatsApp's new 'Communities' messaging tool sounds a lot like Slack Beauty YouTubers are making their pets pick out their makeup Elon Musk isn't joining Twitter's board of directors after all Parrot tells firefighter to 'f*ck off' during rescue attempt 'Our Flag Means Death' heals the wounds of SuperWhoLocke queerbaiting Netflix introduces 'two thumbs up' in attempt to refine its recommendation algorithm 'Wordle' alternatives for movie fans: 'Framed' and 'Actorle' How to remove followers on Twitter The 15 horniest emoji, ranked Ryan Reynolds just tweeted 12 words to describe his gin, and they're ridiculously perfect How to manage access to collaborative playlists on Spotify The people have spoken and they want to eat the diseased tomb cheese The often gross and rarely sexy history of video game sex scenes No, Mike Pence’s website has not been hacked. Please take a deep breath. The best YouTube channels to use as background noise Amazon Prime Video's 10 best hidden gems for when you need something new to you Angela from 'The Office' called out her nephew for his Tinder photo Warning: The behind
2.1509s , 10131.7421875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch Scandal Sin in the City (2001)】,Miracle Information Network